Hello, I have a Neat NM-1000 scanner that I would like to try to get working with SANE. Someone previously tried to get it working, but ultimately could not determine which chipset it uses:
http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/sane-devel/2011-June/028637.html The chipset is still not detected with the latest SANE backends (1.0.24). 'sane-find-scanner -v -v' reports: <Couldn't determine the type of the USB chip (result from sane-backends 1.0.24)> The e-mail linked above suggested using usbsnoop on Windows to capture a log, from which it might be possible to determine the chipset. I installed usbsnoop from http://sourceforge.net/projects/usbsnoop/, but it does not seem to be functional in Windows 7. Is there another USB sniffer that might capture the relevant information? Would it be possible to determine the chipset from taking it apart and examining the internals? There seem to be no accessible screws on the device, so I am not sure I can open it without breaking it (but am willing to do that as a last resort). Is reverse engineering the Windows or Mac drivers a possibility for determining the chipset? Maybe running them through 'strings' would be revealing? Thanks, Kentrell
